Domestic Violence

What is domestic violence?

Domestic violence is an escalating pattern of abuse in which one partner in an intimate relationship controls the other through force, intimidation, or the threat of violence.

Domestic violence is more than physical assaults. Abusers may use a combination of tactics to gain or maintain control in a relationship. Domestic violence can include sexual, spiritual, verbal, emotional, psychological, and physical abuse. Abusers also use threats of harm, isolation, privilege, jealousy, finances, children, and systems—such as Welfare, Immigration, or Child Protective Services—to exert power over their victims. Stalking is also a form of domestic violence.

Economic abuse occurs in 98% of abusive relationships, and can strip away financial stability and options regardless of a survivor’s socioeconomic background, impeding safety. Economic dependency is the strongest predictor of a survivor’s decision to remain with or return to an abusive partner. Visit our Economic Empowerment Toolkit for more resources and information!

Finally, abusers often deny the reality or severity of their abusive behaviors.

Who does domestic violence affect?

Nationally, nearly one third of American women

report physical or sexual abuse from a husband or boyfriend at some point in their lives, according to a 1998 Commonwealth Fund survey. In San Francisco, the police department responds to about 4,200 domestic violence reports annually. It is difficult to know just how many individuals and families feel the impact of domestic violence, because an estimated 40% of victims do not report abuse (Department of Justice, 2005).Domestic violence affects all of us—children, teens, adults, elders. It occurs between people of all races, nationalities, economic classes, ages, physical abilities, and education levels. It takes place in all types of intimate relationships—heterosexual, same-sex, marriage, dating, and former relationships. It can also happen in relationships between two people who are not intimate partners, like between two family members or an elder adult and their caregiver. It can happen to anyone.

You are not responsible for the abuse!

Batterers often blame their abusive behavior on drugs or alcohol, stress, childhood abuse, or their partner. If your partner’s behavior makes you feel unsafe, you are not to blame. If you have experienced abuse, you may have feelings of isolation, fear, shame, and hopelessness. That’s normal and okay. You are not responsible for someone else’s violence.

It is a crime if someone physically hurts or threatens you. No one has the right to hurt you, even if that person is a spouse, partner, or family member.

You are not alone.

While every relationship has its own unique rhythm and patterns, most victims experience domestic violence in a cycle of three repeating phases that escalate over time: the tension-building phase, the explosion phase or acute battering incident, and the hearts and flowers phase. During the tension-building phase, you may feel like you are “walking on eggshells,” like you need to calm and placate your partner to try to prevent an explosion. When this tension becomes too extreme, the control or violence escalates into an explosive release of tension, called an acute battering incident. Finally, the hearts and flowers phase can bring apologies, promises, gifts, and efforts to repair and strengthen the relationship. This phase can feel hopeful, like your partner will change and the relationship will get better. Over time, the kindness and apologies of the hearts and flowers phase often disappear as abuse escalates. If you are a victim or survivor of abuse, you are not alone.

Looking to help out?

Get Connected

Adult Crisis Line
1-877-503-1850

Teen Crisis Line
1-877-923-0700

Counseling and Supportive Services
1-415-503-0500

Stay in the loop

La Casa de las Madres responds to calls for help from domestic violence victims, of all ages, 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. We give survivors the tools to transform their lives. We seek to prevent future violence by educating the community and by redefining public perceptions about domestic violence.

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